Vitae or Vita

Unless you are going to claim credit for accomplishments in previous incarnations, you should refer to your “vita,” not your “vitae.”

All kidding aside, the “ae” in “vitae” supposedly indicates the genitive rather than the plural (that is, vitae in this case works like a possessive form to modify “curriculum”); but the derivation of vita from curriculum vitae is purely speculative (see the Oxford English Dictionary), and vitae on its own makes no sense grammatically.

“Résumé,” by the way, is a French word with both “Es” accented, and literally means “summary.” In English one often sees it without the accents, or with only the second accent, neither of which is a serious error.

But if you’re trying to show how multilingual you are, remember the first accent.